European Tribune

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heh, i like your attitude, AT.

i have recently come to the conclusion that the healthiest survival trait these days is to cultivate an connoisseur's appreciation for absurdity...

there is tremendous resistance to this from the part of the brain that insists that life must make sense.

resistance is futile...

the connection between cause and effect is totally incomprehensible to the average humanoid...

my favourite-of-the-day:

sending negroponte to advise musharref on what to do next...

ROFLMAO!!!

excuse me, i must concentrate on a report concerning the russian government trying to extract some religious cultists from their barricaded stronghold in a cave, where they are threatening to blow themselves up with their children if anyone tries to winkle them out.

sometimes life's surreality has a hollow tone...

emotions crash together like storm crosscurrents in a windy bay.

one day calm will return, imsh'allah.

kismet

The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person doing it. Chinese Proverb.

by melo (melometa4(at)gmail.com) on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 06:24:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Surely the simplest answer to the cultists is just to leave them. When the world does not end on schedule, they will probably come out again.
by Gary J on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 07:59:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]
sending negroponte to advise musharref on what to do next...

But where have we seen this before?  Maybe Nguyen van Thieu, maybe the Shah of Iran, maybe Ferdinand Marcos.  Time to leave old friend that's our best advice.  Should a told you before but couldn't quite manage it, priorities and all.

I can swear there ain't no heaven but I pray there ain't no hell. _ Blood Sweat & Tears

by Gringo (stargazing camel at aoldotcom) on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 09:25:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Yeah, I'm laughing all the way to my grave.  There's part of me that takes some satisfaction in "see what you've done, you mental midgets" schadenfreude, but I'd put it on a level of about the amount of satisfaction someone who's being waterboarded would get out of seeing his torturer stub his toe, considering that my grandchildren could die horrible deaths thanks to the hubris/idiocy/ignorance/greed/your-word-here of the powers that be.

Gore Vidal had it right, though, it's entertainment of a sort, a really twisted sort, and another hero of mine, Kurt Vonnegut, said (paraphrasing) that we're all just here to entertain ourselves, so if I can't trust my heroes, where am I going to turn?  I really enjoyed the posts above, so I guess EuroTrib is one of those "turn to" places.  Back into my shell now.

Karen in Austin after several gin and tonics.

Nighty-night, as we say in (loathesome) Texas

Thence comes our true nobility by grace, It was not willed us with our rank and place. Chaucer

by Wife of Bath (bakerswife13@yahoo.com) on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 09:40:06 PM EST
[ Parent ]
thank you

sometimes life's surreality has a hollow tone

I remain firmly convinced we are living in a screenplay written by Andre Breton based on a story by Franz Kafka.  

It's the director I can't get a handle on.  

Speaking of the Absurd ...

I'm looking for the title of a film I saw some decades ago, as I'd like to see it again.  It was French or French Canadian production, shot in black and white.  Basically, it was about a 'hard boiled detective' type wandering through various scenes.  The only scene I can describe is one where a rebel walks forward on a diving board, is shot, and women divers do a 'Busby Berkeley' sequential dive into the pool, and hold him down until he drowns.  I saw it in the 70s but I think it was shot in the 50s -- but I could be wrong.

Does anyone know of this?  


A doo run-run-run, a doo run-run

by ATinNM on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 10:45:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Peyote Place or Valley of the Trolls?

You can't be me, I'm taken
by Sven Triloqvist on Sun Nov 18th, 2007 at 04:32:24 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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